I got this email and am wondering about it’s validity. It claims all 26 of these statements are true. I searched Snopes.com and SDMB, but didn’t find anything about it.
Not quite true. My dad works in advertising, and whatever food they’re advertising must be used. If the ad is for milk, then actual milk must be used.
But - if they’re advertising chocolate syrup, then the “ice cream” they’re pouring it over is most likely thickly-made instant mashed potatoes. When the ad is for cereal, the “milk” they pour over it is sometimes thinned out paint. For still shots, it’s sometimes thinned out white glue. Look for the strategically-placed perfect drops on a corn flake.
Real milk looks washed out under the studio lights, and real ice cream melts too quickly.
The first part is true. I don’t know at what age they do appear, though.
The American Dental Association confirms that, but they were too expensive and not commonly used until the 20th century. Most people used rags to clean their teeth.
Food, too.
Other species of birds can do this.
False. The song “Carolina,” was made state song on February 11, 1911, which puts is squarely in the public domain (especially since it was written long before then).
Ostriches don’t bury their head in the sand. They just lean down very low and their heads may seem to disappear from a distance. This was misinterpeted and stuck.
is right to a degree, Milk looks yellow under bright light. White paint thinned could be used in a pinch, but it doesn’t pour right, so if it’s a pour shot, some other stuff is used. If my brain were working this morning, I’d tell you what it is. It’s something like cortisone or some such thing. Man. My brain hurts.
No answers to the original question yet? I’ve heard that Hitchcock lost his belly button in an appendectomy surgery. It’s not that he didn’t have one, just that it was covered by scar tissue.
40 people are sent to the hospital for dog bites every minute.
Those poor people! Seriously, that works out to 21,000,000 (approx) per year, which seems high for the U.S., although perhaps plausible for the entire world.
9. The average person over fifty will have spent 5 years waiting in lines.
How old is the average person over 50? 60? People don’t spent 8% (5 years out of 60) of their time waiting in lines.
40,000 Americans are injured by toilets each year.
If we include injuries suffered when people are installing them, moving them or fall on them getting out of the bathtub, it seems plausible.
The only 2 animals that can see behind themselves without turning their heads are the rabbit and the parrot.
I imagine that many insects with compound eyes can do so as well.
Three is wrong. I’ve been smoking a pack a day for decades and I have never lost a tooth.
22 is right, but big whoop. No important people travel with the other importants, i.e, the Pres and Cheney won’t travel together, and corporate hot shots won’t travel together usually.
That I can believe. Two cousins of mine just had belly tucks, and breast enhancements too, but nevermind that part, as part of the belly tucks a section of skin off their abdomen was removed, the portion that contained the belly button. Since this was plastic surgery new belly buttons were crafted by the surgeon, and they look reasonably realistic. However I can see where someone having some abdominal surgery for other reasons might come out of it sans belly button.
Like many such statements, this depends on the definitions involved.
What is meant by “see behind themselves”?
You could say that any animal that can see a range more than 180 degrees wide can see at least partly behind itself. Then that would include horses, cows, sheep, goats, gazelles, and most grazing herbivores. (When you are stalked by lions, wolves, etc., it’s an evolutionary advantage to see a wide view of the plain.)
Or if you define it strictly as being able to see the point directly in back of your face, then only animals with a 360 degree range of vision would qualify. That would be a much smaller group, probably only including those whose eyes project out from the skull, or insects with compound eyes, etc.
In any case, my usual reaction to such statements is “so what?”.